Major pension funds ask for climate change study

Some of the largest pension funds in the U.S. and the world are worried that major fossil-fuel companies may not be as profitable in the future because of efforts to limit climate change, and they want details on how the firms will manage a long-term shift to cleaner energy sources.

In a statement, leaders of 70 funds said they’re asking 45 of the world’s top oil, gas, coal and electric power companies to do detailed assessments of how efforts to control climate change could impact their businesses.

“Institutional investors must think over the long term, which means that we must take environmental risks into consideration when we make investments,” New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli told The Associated Press in a statement. The state’s Common Retirement Fund manages almost $161 billion of investments.

Fossil fuels currently provide about 80 percent of all the energy used in the world. The pension funds say that because it takes decades to recoup the huge investments required for fossil-fuel exploration, there’s a significant chance that future regulations will limit production or impose expensive pollution-control requirements that would reduce the fuels’ profitability.

Other signers of the letter include the comptrollers or treasurers of California, New York City, Maryland, Oregon, Vermont and Connecticut, as well as The Church of England Pensions Board, the Scottish Widows Investment Partnership, the investment firm Rockefeller & Co. and dozens of other funds that control a total of about $3 trillion. Only a fraction of that is with fossil-fuel companies, however.

The funds sent letters to the fossil-fuel companies last month, asking for studies to be finished by spring.

The American Petroleum Institute, which represents the industry, was examining the statement and did not immediately comment. Shell Oil Co. declined to comment.

“The underlying question here is the billions of dollars that are being invested” in exploration for fossil fuels every year, and whether that’s a prudent investment, said Jack Ehnes, the head of the California’s State Teachers’ Retirement System, which has about $5.4 billion invested in major fossil-fuel companies.

Ehnes made clear that his fund is not seeking to punish the fossil-fuel companies but, rather, work with them to study the issue and identify long-term options that will be good for shareholders, the environment and the firms.

While the pension funds are concerned about climate change, their strategy is more moderate than a student-led movement that is asking schools around the country to divest from fossil fuels.

The effort is being coordinated by Boston-based Ceres, a coalition of investors and companies that advocate for sustainable business practices, and the Carbon Tracker initiative, an effort to get companies to better explain to investors the value of their fossil-fuel reserves.

Carin Dehne-Kiley, the director of Corporate Ratings for Standard & Poor’s in New York, said the issue of how climate change may impact companies is “definitely something that we think about over the long term.”

But she added that it’s going to be hard for the companies to estimate and quantify long-term risks, since the timing and intensity of regulations could vary so much in the future, as could the pace of climate change.

Nevertheless, the financial clout of the pension funds definitely makes it more likely that major fossil-fuel companies will listen to the concerns, Dehne-Kiley said.

“We’ve been pleasantly surprised by the seriousness” of some companies who are “not just blowing us off,” said Andrew Logan, a Ceres spokesman, who said 30 companies have sent preliminary responses.

Ceres estimates that $674 billion was invested in developing fossil-fuel resources around the world in 2012, compared with $281 billion for renewables.